[新聞]A Second Wave of Success Is Sweeter f …
整個版面都英文標題不太好看,但…總之先貼著( ̄▽ ̄#)﹏﹏。
A Second Wave of Success Is Sweeter for Sharapova
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/27/sports/tennis/27tennis.html
By CHRISTOPHER CLAREY
Published: January 27, 2008
MELBOURNE, Australia — Beers in hand on the terrace of the
players lounge, Michael Joyce and his fellow coach Yuri
Sharapov were reveling in their pupil Maria Sharapova’s
first Australian Open singles title. They were laughing and
relaxing, the pressure gone at least for a few days until
she lands in Israel to play her first Fed Cup match for
Russia.
After a difficult, disappointing season by Sharapova’s
exacting standards, one filled with shoulder discomfort and
emotional trauma, this season is off to a perfect start:
seven matches and seven victories with no sets lost despite
one of the toughest draws conceivable.
“If you put the whole tournament together, for sure it was
the best tennis she’s played,” Joyce said after Sharapova
’s 7-5, 6-3 victory over Ana Ivanovic in Saturday’s
final. “Today was tough because it was so hot. To be
honest, of all the Grand Slams, this is one of the toughest
to win because conditions can change day after day. One day
it’s 27 degrees Celsius, the next day it’s 40. One day
the roof is closed, the next day it’s open. To get through
two weeks is just mental toughness.”
Joyce, a 34-year-old former touring professional who peaked
at No. 64 in the ATP rankings, has known Sharapova since
she was 10 and both were taking regular lessons with Robert
Lansdorp, the gruff, California-based ground-stroke guru.
Joyce hit with Sharapova on occasion then and began helping
her on a full-time basis in 2004, shortly after his own
career wound down and shortly after hers soared into the
clouds with her surprising Wimbledon victory at age 17.
“This is like success the second time around, and it’s
actually a lot sweeter,” Sharapova said on Saturday, her
long legs crossed and her long arms folded during an
interview with a group of reporters. “Because I think I’
ve proven to myself that I can come back from having
setbacks and negative thoughts and having doubts in my mind
of: ‘Where is this injury taking me? It’s not making me a
better player. It’s making me sit at home and spend my
money on artwork. I’m not having a great time here.’
“Although I love art and all that, I’d much rather be out
there winning tournaments and winning Grand Slams.”
By most tennis players’ standards, this hardly counts as
delayed gratification. At age 20, Sharapova has already
been ranked No. 1 and has won three Grand Slam singles
titles. All she needs now is the French Open title to
complete her collection.
“It’s probably one of the biggest challenges I’m going
to have in my career, to win it,” Sharapova said. “But as
you all know, I love the challenges, and that’s what
drives me, and I’m getting better and better and feeling
stronger.”
Joyce agrees and is, of course, paid to agree. He has
gradually emerged as the biggest day-to-day influence on
Sharapova’s game and, though her excitable father remains
on the official coaching staff, she now calls Joyce “
basically my main coach” and spent the off-season training
with Joyce exclusively.
“A lot of the things I go through as a tennis player, he’
s been through many times,” Sharapova said. “My dad never
played tennis. He played but was never professional.”
Sharapova said she also considers Joyce “a very close part
of my family,” and on Saturday she underscored their
strong, emotional connection by dedicating her victory to
Joyce’s mother, Jane, whose death from cancer last year
was another reason that 2007 was a traumatic season.
“My mom had cancer for six years,” Joyce said, “so ever
since I started with Maria, my mom had been having her ups
and downs.”.
“She kind of went through it with me in a way,” Joyce
said, referring to Sharapova. “I didn’t mention it to her
much, but I think she really grew to like my mom. I think
out of respect to me she didn’t want to talk about it too
much in public, because she didn’t really know how I’d
feel about it. But I really think it affected her a lot
more than she let on.”
Meanwhile, the bursitis in Sharapova’s right shoulder that
surfaced shortly before this tournament in 2007 was
damaging her season, cutting into her practice time and
keeping her from serving without fear in matches. It was
not until she received a cortisone injection from doctors
in Toronto in September that the condition dissipated.
After deciding to continue her season and play in the tour
championships in Madrid, she made a surprising, deeply
reassuring run to the final, nearly beating the No. 1
player, Justine Henin.
When she returned to practice in Los Angeles in late
November after a brief vacation, Joyce sensed that good
results were ahead. “From the first day we started
training in the off-season, she was kind of like a woman on
a mission,” he said.
Yuri Sharapov did not join them until they arrived in Hong
Kong for an exhibition in early January. Sharapov, who has
been warned for coaching his daughter during matches, is
widely viewed inside and outside the tennis world as an
overbearing parent whose aggressive behavior in the players
box and comments toward some of Sharapova’s opponents have
been too often over the top. Joyce views him differently.
“It’s funny when I hear these stories about Yuri and this
and that,” Joyce said. “I have people come up to me all
the time and say to me: ‘How can you work with that guy?
That guy is a nut,’ and this and that. And if they had any
idea. I actually really miss him when he’s not around.
“I think part of the reason she has that fighting
mentality is because of him in a way, because it’s like us
against the world. It’s kind of like the persona he puts
out. But we have a great time. You know, he’s funny as can
be.”
There was not much laughter in Rod Laver Arena after
Sharapova’s 6-4, 6-0 victory over Henin in the
quarterfinals when Sharapov yanked the hood of his
camouflage jacket over his head and made a throat-slashing
gesture in the direction of his daughter. Sharapova later
explained that it was a private joke that had nothing to do
with Henin but was related to the jacket which she thought
made her father look like an assassin. Visibly wary of the
topic, she told Australian television on Saturday, “I’m
going to burn that jacket.”
Sharapov, who rarely gives interviews, addressed the issue
briefly after the tournament and said he had meant no harm.
“Do you really think I would be stupid enough to make a
sign like that about some other player?” he said. “If I
were so bad as people think I am bad, then God would not
let her win the big things she is winning.”
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